The switched-mode power supply comprises a secondary winding and four diodes for producing two rectified voltages of the same polarity, one of which can be regulated. A connection of the unregulated voltage has connected to it a variable zener diode as an error amplifier for transmitting a regulating signal to the primary side. The driver stage provides a pulse-width-modulated square-wave signal for driving the switching transistor which is arranged at a high potential between the operating voltage on the input side and a first connection of the primary winding. The second connection of the primary winding is connected with a zener diode and provides a stabilized voltage for the driver stage. Arranged between the driver stage and the control electrode of the switching transistor there is a differentiating element which produces positive and negative switching voltages for controlling the switching transistor.

Patent
   5973940
Priority
Nov 07 1996
Filed
Oct 30 1997
Issued
Oct 26 1999
Expiry
Oct 30 2017
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
2
12
all paid
1. Switched-mode power supply having an isolating transformer which comprises a primary winding and a secondary winding with two connections;
a switching transistor in series with said primary winding;
a variable zener diode with a control input;
a rectifier network having four diodes connected with said secondary winding, at each of said two connections a first diode is connected with reverse polarity to ground and a second diode is connected in forward direction to produce two rectified voltages with positive polarity, or, by reversing the polarity of said first and second diodes in order to produce two rectified, negative voltages;
one of said rectified voltages being coupled with said variable zener diode for stabilizing an output voltage of said power supply by way of transmitting a regulating signal via said transformer to the primary side, said control input being coupled with said voltage to be stabilized; and,
said second rectified voltage being connected to a load.
2. Switched-mode power supply according to claim 1, wherein the variable zener diode is used as an error amplifier for regulating an output voltage of the switched-mode power supply, or any voltage of another switched-mode power supply.
3. Switched-mode power supply according to claim 2, wherein the anode of the zener diode is connected to earth and the control electrode is connected via a resistor network to the output voltage to be stabilized.
4. Switched-mode power supply according to claim 2, wherein between said rectifier diode for said load and a smoothing capacitor a light-emitting diode is arranged in a forward direction between said diode and said capacitor in order to indicate the operating state.
5. Switched-mode power supply according to claim 4, wherein the smooth DC voltage is used to supply a load having a low power consumption, preferably an infrared receiver.

a. Field of the Invention

The invention is based on a switched-mode power supply which contains a switching transistor as well as an isolating transformer having a primary winding and a secondary winding.

b. Description of the Prior Art

These require a relatively high level of component complexity, particularly if regulation information must be transmitted from the secondary side to the primary side in order to stabilize an operating voltage on the secondary side. Various embodiments are known for transmitting this information, for example using an optocoupler. DE 40 04 707 discloses a circuit in which a regulating signal is transmitted back via a transistor stage in a brief time interval during a quiescent phase of the isolating transformer.

The object of the present invention is to reduce the component complexity for switched-mode power supplies of the type.

According to the invention, a secondary winding is used to produce two rectified voltages of the same polarity by a suitable circuit of four diodes. As a result of this circuit, the switched-mode power supply operates both as a forward converter and as a flyback converter. Both voltages can therefore be used as operating voltages, although only one can be stabilized in a regulated switched-mode power supply. However, the other can advantageously be used for transmitting regulation information from the secondary side to the primary side. A variable zener diode which is used as an error amplifier, for example the Type TL 431, is particularly suitable for this purpose. This zener diode has a control input which is connected by means of a suitable circuit, via a passive resistor network, to a secondary voltage to be regulated. Variation of the zener voltage of this zener diode allows the winding connected to it to be loaded to a greater or lesser extent so that this load can be tapped off via an auxiliary winding on the primary side of the isolating transformer.

The stabilized operating voltage, which is preferably used for supplying a load having a low power consumption, contains a series-connected light-emitting diode to indicate operation of relevant equipment. Since the light-emitting diode is connected downstream from the rectifier diode and upstream of a stabilization capacitor, it is operated at the pulsating switching frequency of the switched-mode power supply. At the high switching frequencies used here, the light-emitting diode has a very low power consumption of only, for example, 3 milliwatts; there is therefore no need for any resistor in series with the light-emitting diode.

According to a development of the invention, the control input of the switching transistor is driven by the driver stage via a differentiating element, the switching transistor being arranged between the operating voltage on the input side and the primary winding of the isolating transformer. Since this results in the control input being DC-decoupled, it can be connected via a resistor to the potential of the operating voltage on the input side.

The driver stage produces square-wave pulses for driving the switching transistor. The time constant of the differentiating element is chosen such that the switching transistor is switched off by a positive pulse flank and is switched on by a negative pulse flank. The output voltage of the switched-mode power supply can be regulated by varying the pulse width and/or the frequency.

Since the switching transistor is connected upstream of the primary winding of the isolating transformer in the current flow direction, that end of the primary winding which is at the lower potential can be used to produce a supply voltage on the primary side. This can be stabilized by means of a network which contains two zener diodes and at the same time provides the starting current for the driver stage.

The switched-mode power supply may have a very compact construction and, because of its low power consumption, is suitable in particular for use as a separate standby power supply for a television set or video recorder. In the standby mode, it drives, for example, only an infrared receiver and, for this purpose, requires a power consumption of less than 100 mW, including loads. This includes the light-emitting diode as an indication of operation, which is connected directly in the current path for supplying the infrared receiver.

Alternatively, the switched-mode power supply can advantageously be used to produce voltages with higher power levels, for example using further secondary windings, and one of these voltages can likewise be stabilized by means of the variable zener diode.

The invention will be explained in the following text using, by way of example, a schematic drawing in which the FIGURE shows a circuit diagram of a switched-mode power supply designed according to the invention.

The switched-mode power supply in the figure contains a bridge rectifier having four diodes DP01-DP04 for producing an operating voltage UB1 on the input side from an AC voltage VAC. The operating voltage UB1 is stabilized by two series-connected zener diodes DP05 and DP06 in parallel with two series-connected capacitors CP05 and CP06. A supply voltage UB2 is at the same time stabilized via the mutually connected center tap of these series circuits. Two reactive elements C1 and C2 considerably reduce the AC voltage applied to the bridge rectifier. In this exemplary embodiment, the operating voltage UB1 is 36 volts, and the supply voltage UB2 is 6 volts.

The operating voltage UB1 is connected to the emitter of a switching transistor TP21 whose collector is connected to the primary winding W1 of an isolating transformer Tr1. The second connection 4 of the primary winding W1, which is at a lower potential, is connected to the supply voltage UB2. The supply voltage UB2 is thus not only provided by the zener diode DP02 but is also obtained from the primary winding W1 by operation of the switching transistor TP21 and is stabilized by the zener diode DP06 and the capacitor CP06. The supply voltage UB2 is used to supply a driver stage IP01 and a transistor stage TP30.

In this exemplary embodiment, the driver stage IP01 is an oscillator in the form of an appropriately connected operational amplifier. It operates as an astable multivibrator and produces square-wave signals. The output of the driver stage IP01 is connected via a differentiating element to the control input of the switching transistor TP21. In this exemplary embodiment, the differentiating element comprises a series circuit formed by a resistor RP20 and a capacitor CP20, whose values are chosen such that they differentiate the switching flanks of the oscillator signal.

Connected in parallel with the emitter and the base of the switching transistor TP21 there is a resistor RP21 which is used to draw the base potential of said switching transistor TP21 to the operating voltage UP1 so that the switching transistor is in the switched-off state when there is no drive signal. Differentiation of the square-wave pulses results in suitable positive and negative pulses being produced alternately in order to switch the switching transistor TP21 on and off.

The isolating transformer TR1 contains a primary auxiliary winding W3 which is used to provide a regulating signal for stabilizing one or more secondary output voltages. This regulating signal is amplified in a transistor stage TP30 and is supplied to the oscillator IP01 in order to regulate the pulse width and/or the frequency.

The switched-mode power supply operates, for example, at an oscillator frequency of 100 kHz, which is governed by the oscillator IP01. Alternatively, the switched-mode power supply can be synchronized, for example over a frequency range of 40-150 kHz. With appropriate component values, the differentiating element can be matched to the desired oscillation frequency or an oscillation range.

The following values were used for relevant components for the drive level illustrated in the figure:

______________________________________
RP20: 4.7 kOhm
CP20: 100
pF
RP21: 47
kOhm
______________________________________

The switching transistor may also be, in particular, an MOS field-effect transistor which, because of its high-impedance gate input, can be controlled with very low switching currents.

The isolating transformer Tr1 of the switched-mode power supply contains one or possibly more secondary windings W2 for producing supply voltages. In this exemplary embodiment, a relatively small load IE, for example an infrared receiver of a television set or of a video recorder, is operated by means of a supply voltage US1. The secondary winding W2 is connected to four diodes DS01, DS02, DS10 and DS20 in such a manner that two voltages of the same polarity are produced, in this case two positive voltages US1 and US2, in that, at a first connection 5 of the secondary winding W2, a diode DS10 is connected in the forward direction to a load IS10 and a diode DS01 is connected in the reverse direction to earth GNDS and, at a second connection 8 of the secondary winding W2, a diode DS20 is connected in the forward direction to the load IE and a diode DS02 is connected in the reverse direction to earth GNDS. Alternatively, two rectified, negative voltages can be produced by reversing the polarity of the diodes DS01, DS02, DS10, DS20.

The isolating transformer Tr1 DC-decouples the earth GNDS and the earth GNDP.

The voltage US1 is smoothed by a capacitor CS20 in order to supply the load IE with a stabilized output voltage UE. The supply voltage US2 is connected to the cathode of a variable zener diode IS10, its anode being at earth potential. The Type TL 431 zener diode from Motorola is particularly suitable for use as the variable zener diode IS10. The control electrode of this zener diode IS10 is connected via a resistor network RS10, RS11, RS12 and RS13 to a supply voltage to be stabilized, in this exemplary embodiment the voltage UE supplied to the load IE. Alternatively, by way of example, a supply voltage from a further secondary winding or from a further switched-mode power supply can be connected to the control electrode.

A light-emitting diode BS20 can advantageously be arranged in the forward direction between the diode DS20 and the capacitor CS20 in order to indicate the operating state. It is admittedly in the current path to a load but, since the load has only a low power consumption, this does not overload the light-emitting diode BS20. This saves any need for a series resistor. Since the light-emitting diode BS20 is arranged upstream of the smoothing capacitor CS20, it is operated by the voltage US1, which pulsates at the frequency of the switched-mode power supply. With this method of operation, it requires only a very small amount of power, in this exemplary embodiment only about 3 mW.

The switched-mode power supply in the figure produces the supply voltage US1 in the on phase and the supply voltage US2, of the same polarity, in the off phase, by means of the circuit which is used here and comprises the diodes DS01, DS02, DS10 and DS20. Thus, only one of the supply voltages US1, US2 can be stabilized if the pulse-width ratio and the frequency of the oscillator IP1 vary. However, the second supply voltage US2 can in this case advantageously be used to transmit regulation information from the secondary side to the primary side.

In this case, the variable zener diode IS10 replaces an error amplifier with complex circuitry. In addition, there is no need for any further secondary winding or any additional component, for example an optocoupler, to transmit the control information.

The resistors RS10-RS14 of the resistor network via which the variable zener diode IS10 is connected to the output voltage UE to be stabilized have the following approximate values in this exemplary embodiment:

______________________________________
RS10: 330 K
RS11: 0
RS12: 100 K
RS13: 100 K
RS14: 4.7 K
______________________________________

The exemplary embodiment in the figure is preferably used to produce low power levels on the secondary side and has very high efficiency. The transformer Tr1 may have a very compact design, particularly because it is designed only for a low operating voltage. The switched-mode power supply is therefore particularly suitable for use as a separate standby switched-mode power supply for entertainment electronic equipment. Alternatively, it can be designed for higher power levels, and is thus also suitable, for example, for use as a DC-DC converter in conjunction with a car battery. The switched-mode power supply is started in a simple manner via the zener diode DP05.

Rilly, Gerard, Rehm, Markus, Riesle, Thomas, Rodriguez-Duran, Jose I.

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Oct 06 1997RIESLE, THOMASDEUTSCHE THOMSON-BRANST GMBHASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0088710457 pdf
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